Introduction: DIY Anti Backlash Nuts - Super Cheap and Simple
This nut can be used for any kind of linear motion. Weather it is on a 3D-Printer, a CNC or a camera slider. It only takes an hour to make and works amazingly well! Delrin is the perfect material to slide over metal.
There is very little wear and it fits the shape of your leadscrew perfectly. Therfore there is virtually no backlash. I´ve been using this nut on my large format CNC for 2 years now without any problems. The best part is that they are super cheap. This saved me 200$ over store bought lead nuts.
Things you need:
Step 1: Turn Your Lead Screw Into a Tap.
Use a hacksaw to cut some groves into your lead screw. This end can still be used in a coupling. The more groves you have, the more chips it can hold. (You can also do that with normal screws once you broke off all your taps. )
Step 2: Prepare Your Stock.
I am using Delrin which is also called POM or Acetal. You can get 1 foot long bars for 15$ on ebay. Just cut of a slice with any kind of saw and drill a hole in the middle that has roughly the size of the pitch diameter of your leadscrew. The dimensions are not critical.
Step 3: Heat Up Your Tap and Delrin Stock.
A blowtorch or hot air gun work. Heat it up so the lead screw has efficient thermal energy to melt the delrin stock around it. Make sure you melt the delrin around the plain part of the leas screw. Not the notches at the end. A hotter lead screw will contract more and cause a looser fit. If you heat up the delrin more, it will cause a tighter fit. However, attaching the lead screw with hose clamps allows you to deform them slightly. This causes contact in both directions which means there is virtually zero backlash. So the temperature of both delrin and tap are not critical. This is an easy project after all.
WEAR GLOVES!!!
Step 4: Melt the Delrin Stock Around the Lead Screw.
Wear gloves and push the delrin stock around the lead screw. This will make the stock adapt exactly the same shape as your lead screw and cause a great fit. Most of the time there is a gap between the two halves, use some delrin chips and the torch again to fill the gap. Don´t breath this!
Step 5: Finish the Threads.
Move the nut up and down over the tap end of your leadscrew. (Not the one you melted it on.) A drop of oil helps. It can be difficult to make the nut move for the very first time. You can use a wrench to get it loose.
Use a brush to clean the chips out of the groves in the tap.
Step 6: Make It Pretty!
Clamp the lead screw in a lathe. Clean up all surfaces and add a channel in the middle of the cylinder to receive the hose clamp.
Step 7: Broaching - Create a Flat Side.
You need a flat side to stop the nut from spinning. Since this is only plastic you can simply broach it on the lathe. Turn of the power and lock the spindle. Then make very thin cuts with a flat and wide cutting tool. Works like a charm.
Step 8: Admire Your Work.
Appreciating your achivements is an important step!
Step 9: Mount the Nut on Your Linear Axis.
I found that the easiest and cheapes way to mount this type of nut is a hose clamp. The hose clamp has a enough force to derform the nut slightly. This will change the clearance. You want it just tight enough so there is no movement back and forth. (No backlash) The nut will wear, but very very slowly. Don´t worry. You can always tighten the hose clamp later.

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16 Comments
5 years ago
Setp 8 hahahaha cool
5 years ago
Max, is the stepper motor strong enough to push a 3-4 pound camera/lens up a slope or vertically if the slider is oriented that way? Or, does it only work horizontally? Thank you.
5 years ago
Muito bom, gosto desse tipo de criatividade!!!
5 years ago
How does it compare to the standart brass nut? Does it have less friction?
Can the same methods described here work with PTFE instead of POM?
Reply 5 years ago
A brass nut has backlash. This nut has pretty much no backlash at all, since both sides of the thread are always in contact. You can look up friction tables to find the values for brass-steel and ptfe-steel. Lower values are better.
You can use PTFE or POM. I will try PTFE on my next CNC.
6 years ago
Excellent!!
Reply 6 years ago
Thank you! Are you planing to build one?
Reply 6 years ago
I would like to build a small Cnc router to mill circuit boards. There won't be much load on the leadscrews but backlash must be small. Your idea just be the trick.
Reply 6 years ago
That should work even with a load. I am cutting aluminium on my CNC. Please post some pictures of your cnc!
6 years ago
Great idea!
Reply 6 years ago
Thank you!
6 years ago
Nicely done!
Reply 6 years ago
Thank you very much!
6 years ago
Could you get a good enough effect if you used the heated "tap" to though a pre-bored block of plastic? How does this Derlin compare to nylon?
Reply 6 years ago
I think Nylon should work just as well.
Reply 6 years ago
I think the threads would push the plastic out of the hole and leave no thread behind. But you could try and melt some fresh plastic into the hole.